The invention relates to a rotor blade consisting of fiber-reinforced plastic for a wind power plant. To decrease radar reflection, it comprises a passive radar absorber that is integrated into the surface.
Flight safety radar systems, which as 2-D radar systems, require the direction and the distance of a flying target in order to display it. Due to the motion of the wind energy rotors, or the rotor blades, such flight safety radar systems generate a moving target. The rotor blades as moving targets are identified just like aircraft, by a sufficiently strong reflection with Doppler components. Thereby, additional moving targets are generated for the radar system, which impede or falsify the flight path of the actual flying target.
From earlier patent applications, for example, DE 199 29 081 A1, inference absorbers and Jaumann absorber designs are known for reducing radar reflection, which ensure a reduction of radar reflection that is of particularly high quality. Because of the very high radar cross-section of a wind power plant of more than 400 m2, however, adequate reflection dampening greater than 20 dB in the operating frequency range of radar systems for flight safety is not guaranteed in all atmospheric conditions. It is common to all previous solutions and production methods that as many surface sections as possible are provided with a reflection-dampening effect.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention involve a specific use of a radar absorber to ensure that the radar system recognizes the wind power plant as such and is able to differentiate it from an actual flying target.
In particular, exemplary embodiments of the present invention involve a rotor blade for a wind power plant comprising fiber-reinforced plastic; and a radar absorber embedded in the fiber-reinforced plastic. The radar absorber includes a layer close to a surface of the rotor blade at a depth of 2 to 5 mm below the surface, the layer close to the surface having a defined electric sheet resistivity of 100 to 800 ohm/square, and a layer far removed from the surface of the rotor blade at a depth of 5 to 16 mm, the layer far removed from the surface having a defined electric sheet resistivity of at a maximum 50 ohm/square. The embedded radar absorber covers one or several discrete surface sections of the rotor blade, without covering the entire surface of the rotor blade.
In accordance with the invention, the passive radar absorber that is embedded in the fiber-reinforced plastic material of the rotor blade comprises the following elements:
a layer far removed from the surface layer at a distance to the layer close to the surface of 5 to 16 mm. The layer far removed from the surface layer can also be designed as fibrous web, cloth, knitted fabric or film. The layer far removed from the surface is a technically conductive layer with a defined electric sheet resistivity of at a maximum 50 ohm/square.
The integrated radar absorber is limited selectively to one or more discrete, i.e. surface areas of the rotor blade that are separated from each other, without covering the entire surface of the rotor blade.
Thereby, the surface areas at the rotor blade edges are preferred, whereby the absorber can also be limited exclusively to surface sections at the rotor blade edges.
In one aspect of the rotor blade, a section of the rotor blade edges is located in at least one of the discrete surface sections at which the radar absorber is present.
In a further aspect, a section of rotor blade edges is present in all discrete surface sections at which a radar absorber is present.
This absorber design in accordance with the invention ensures a mono-static reduction of reflection within a limited angle of incidence.
As the radar absorber does not have to cover all surface sections that are relevant for reflection, this results in advantages with respect to the use of material and weight.
Due to the selective arrangement of the radar absorber on one or several isolated surface sections of the rotor blades, a defined chronologically dependent intensity of reflection is generated during a rotation of the rotor, the characteristic of which makes it possible for the signal processing system of a radar facility to identify this target as wind energy plant and to filter it out. The path formation or tracking of the actual flying target is thereby not impaired.
The quality of the dampening of the reflection by the radar absorber and the use of surfaces by the radar absorber with respect to the design, the dimensions of the rotor blade and the speed of rotation of the rotor make it possible to ensure a defined chronological dependence of the intensity of reflection in the direction of the radar facility.
For the fiber-reinforced plastic material of the rotor blade, the materials that are generally used as starting materials can be used (resin matrix or polymer matrix; carbon fibers, glass fibers or aramide fibers.).
In order to adjust the required electrical sheet resistivity of 100 to 800 ohm/square for the layer of the radar absorber near the surface, commercial fiber materials with low electric conductivity can be adapted correspondingly, for example, by weaving in metallic threads or by coating the fiber material with conductive materials.
In order to be effective for certain polarization orientations of the radar system, the layer of the radar absorber that is close to the surface can have an orientation on the surface, which brings about an orientation-dependent surface conductivity. This can, for example, be achieved by differences in the fiber density or in fiber diameter.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The invention will be explained in further detail in conjunction with several figures. Shown are:
a Illustration of the chronological dependence of the radar cross-section of a wind power plant without radar absorber according to the invention;
b illustration of the dynamic radar cross-section of a wind power plant without radar absorber in accordance with the invention that was captured by a radar recirculation delay of 4.2 seconds;
a illustration of the chronological dependence of the radar cross-section of a wind power system with radar absorber according to the invention;
b illustration of the dynamic radar cross-section of a wind power system with radar absorber according to the invention that was captured at a radar recirculation delay 4.2 seconds;
a Design of a radar absorber in accordance with the invention, integrated into the rotor blade of the wind power plant;
b frequency response of the decrease in reflection (in dB) of the radar absorber in accordance with the invention according to
a shows a rotor blade in accordance with the invention in a 3-D view.
b shows a rotor blade in accordance with the invention in a cross-section view.
c shows a rotor blade in accordance with the invention in a top view.
In conjunction with
a and 1b relate to a rotor without radar absorber in accordance with the invention.
b shows an illustration of the dynamic radar cross-section of the wind power plant over a delay time of 60 seconds in arbitrary units (for reasons of simplification, only the rotor blade pointing upward is taken into consideration assuming that the rotor blade generates interfering reflections along its overall extension) that was captured by the radar system. Here, the radar has a recirculation delay of 4.2 seconds, i.e. the radar captures the wind power plant only at successive points in time with a chronological interval corresponding to its recirculation delay. Accordingly, in
a and
Thus, the radar absorber not only ensures a reflection dampening with respect to the maximum strength of the detected signal, but also significantly reduces the width of the maxima.
In dynamic radar cross-sections, (recirculation delay of the radar is respectively 4.2 s), these differences lead to:
Due to the frequent failure of the radar reflexes of the wind power plant, the signal processing of the radar system can recognize that in this case, it is not a real, but only a mock target, which must be filtered out.
a shows an embodiment in a cross-section illustration of the passive radar absorber in accordance with the invention that is integrated into the rotor blade. The surface of the rotor blade is on the left side. All elements of the absorber are embedded into the fiber-reinforced plastic material of the rotor blade and surrounded by such.
A layer that is close to the surface layer VS (e.g. a fibrous web. cloth, knitted fabric or a film) with a sheet resistivity of 100 to 800 ohm/square is located at a distance of 2 to 5 mm below the surface of the rotor blade. A layer that is far removed from the surface ES (electrically conductive ground surface of the absorber) is located at a distance of 5 to 16 mm below the layer close to the surface VS.
b shows the frequency response of the reflection coefficient pertaining to this absorber. As illustrated in
In the 3-D illustration of
As can be seen from the cross-section illustration according to
The foregoing disclosure has been set forth merely to illustrate the invention and is not intended to be limiting. Since modifications of the disclosed embodiments incorporating the spirit and substance of the invention may occur to persons skilled in the art, the invention should be construed to include everything within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 024 644.1 | May 2008 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/993,655, which is a national stage application of PCT/DE2009/000689, filed May 16, 2009, and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to German Patent Application No. 10 2008 024 644.1, filed May 21, 2008, the entire disclosures of which are expressly incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12993655 | Jan 2011 | US |
Child | 14559499 | US |